NICKY SPENCE, Tenor

Hailed by the Daily Telegraph as ‘a voice of real distinction,’ Nicky Spence is fast emerging as one of ‘our finest young singers.’ An artist of great integrity, Nicky Spence’s unique skills as a singing actor and the rare honesty in his musicianship are steadfastly earning him a place at the top of the profession.

2015-16 season highlights include his debut at the Bastille for Opéra national de Paris in Schoenberg's Moses und Aron, Leoncavallo's Zazá with the BBC Symphony Orchestra at the Barbican under the baton of Maurizio Benini, La gazza Ladra and The Makropoulos Case at Oper Frankfurt, and Števa in David Alden's landmark production of Jenufa at English National Opera. Concert appearances include works by Bach at the BBC Proms with the Academy of Ancient Music, Mendelssohn's Elijah and Bach’s Matthäus-Passion at Royal Festival Hall, and solo recital at St Martins-in-the-Field, Purcell Room, and Royal Concert Hall, Glasgow. Recordings this season include a disc of French mélodie with Malcolm Martineau (Chandos Records) to follow-up on the duo’s critically acclaimed recital disc debut, 'As you like it: Shakespeare Songs', Jonathan Dove’s 'For an Unknown Solider' written for the tenor and the Mozart Players (Onyx), and premiere works by Pavel Haas (Resonus Records).

Last season's highlights included David in a multi-award winning The Master Singers of Nuremberg at the English National Opera with Music Director Edward Gardner, a Rossini double bill at Welsh National Opera led by Carlo Rizzi, and Berlioz’s Benvenuto Cellini at De Nederlandse Opera under Sir Mark Elder’s baton. Concerts included recitals with Roger Vignoles, Julius Drake, Malcolm Martineau, The Allegri Quartet and the Doric Quartet as well as performances with the Tromsø Chamber Orchestra, recitals at Zürich Tonhalle, Purcell Room, Oxford Lieder Festival, and Tippett’s A Child of Our Time with the Auckland Philharmonia in New Zealand.

On the opera stage, Nicky Spence created the role of Brian in the world premiere of Nico Muhly's opera Two Boys at the ENO, a role he reprised for his Metropolitan Opera debut in 2013 conducted by David Robertson. His other recent roles include Števa in Jenůfa at La Monnaie, Brussels, Steuermann in Der fliegender Holländer in concert with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra under Andris Nelsons’ baton as well as at Scottish Opera, Iago in Rossini’s Otello for the Buxton Festival, and Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni at New Zealand Opera. Other performances featured roles in Billy Budd (dir. David Alden), Benvenuto Cellini (dir. Terry Gilliam), Dialogues des Carmélites (dir. John Doyle), Die Zauberflöte (dir. Sir Thomas Allen), Intermezzo, The Beggar’s Opera, The Turn of the Screw, The Rake’s Progress, and Fidelio.

Recent concert performances include Tristan und Isolde with the BBC Scottish Symphony under Donald Runnicles, Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony at the Barbican with the Philharmonia, Finzi's Dies Natalis with the BBCCO, Elgar's The Kingdom at Kings College, Cambridge, Mozart Mass in c minor at Cadogan Hall, and Britten’s Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings with L’Orchestre national d’Île de France and at The Wigmore Hall.

An experienced recording artist, Nicky Spence first attracted a long-term recording contract with Universal Classics at a young age and has increasing recognition on stage, radio and television as a presenter and performer alike, having contributed to tours and Platinum Selling recordings the world over. The tenor’s discography now also includes recital collaborations with Graham Johnson (Schumann: The Complete Songs Vol. 10 / Hyperion), Britten Songs with Malcolm Martineau (Onyx), Messiaen’s La Mort du Nombre (Stone Records) and a disc of premiere Hoddinott recordings. Adding to his credentials in contemporary repertoire is a recent world-premiere recording of Mark-

Anthony Turnage’s song cycle A Constant Obsession, for Resonus Classics, which has received uniformly excellent reviews.

Nicky Spence trained at the Guildhall School of Music & Drama and the National Opera Studio. He took his place as an inaugural Harewood Artist at the ENO in 2011, which is made possible by the American Friends of the ENO.

The tenor recently also has been nominated by the International Opera Awards for Young Singer of the Year 2015 and was also one of ten artists up for this year’s Times Breakthrough Award at the South Bank Sky Arts Awards celebrating the best of up and coming young British talent from across the Arts.

AUGUST 2015: PLEASE DESTROY PREVIOUSLY DATED MATERIALS

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